Electrical connector upper and lower contacts made from a single contact carrier in two groups

ABSTRACT

A method of making an electrical connector which includes an insulative housing having a tongue with two opposite surfaces and plural contacts with contacting portions exposed to the two opposite surfaces of the tongue is characterized by the steps of: forming the plurality of contacts from a single contact carrier to have one group of contacts thereof each with a respective contacting portion connected to a first carrier strip and the other group of contacts thereof each with a respective contacting portion connected to a second carrier strip situated beside the first carrier strip; insert-molding the plurality of contacts with an insulator to form the insulative housing while exposing front ends of the plurality of contacts; and severing the first carrier strip and the second carrier strip from the front ends of the plurality of contacts.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This patent application relates to U.S. patent application Ser. No.16/664,957, filed on Oct. 28, 2019, titled “ELECTRICAL CONNECTOR UPPERAND LOWER CONTACTS MADE FROM A SINGLE CONTACT CARRIER AND INCLUDING TWOOUTERMOST CONTACTS WITH INTEGRAL LATCHING PORTIONS” and U.S. patentapplication Ser. No. 16/666,301, filed on Oct. 28, 2019, titled“ELECTRICAL CONNECTOR UPPER AND LOWER CONTACTS MADE FROM A SINGLECONTACT CARRIER AND INSULATIVE HOUSING MOLDED BY ONE SHOT,” which areassigned to the same assignee as this application.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to an electrical connector including aninsulative housing and a plurality of contacts molded with theinsulative housing, wherein the plurality of contacts are formed from asingle contact carrier and the molding operation is performed in oneshot.

2. Description of Related Arts

China Patent No. 207572614 discloses an electrical connector includingtwo rows of contacts made from respective contact carriers and aninsulative housing molded to the two rows of contacts in two shots. U.S.Pat. No. 7,621,788 discloses an electrical connector pin carrier havinga main panel, a secondary panel, and a set of first pins and a set ofsecond pins both connected between the main panel and the secondarypanel. The two sets of pins have respective contacting portions to beexposed to two opposite surfaces of an insulative housing tongue.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A method of making an electrical connector which includes an insulativehousing having a tongue with two opposite surfaces and plural contactswith contacting portions exposed to the two opposite surfaces of thetongue is characterized by the steps of: forming the plurality ofcontacts from a single contact carrier to have one group of contactsthereof each with a respective contacting portion connected to a firstcarrier strip and the other group of contacts thereof each with arespective contacting portion connected to a second carrier stripsituated beside the first carrier strip; insert-molding the plurality ofcontacts with an insulator to form the insulative housing while exposingfront ends of the plurality of contacts; and severing the first carrierstrip and the second carrier strip from the front ends of the pluralityof contacts.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING

FIG. 1 is a top perspective view of an electrical connector inaccordance with the present invention;

FIG. 2 is a bottom perspective view of the electrical connector;

FIG. 3 is a top perspective view of an intermediate product relating tothe electrical connector;

FIG. 4 is a bottom perspective view of the intermediate product;

FIG. 5 is an exploded view of the intermediate product in FIG. 3;

FIG. 6 is an exploded view of the intermediate product in FIG. 4;

FIG. 7 shows a plurality of contacts of the electrical connector formedon a single contact carrier and an insulative housing molded with thecontacts;

FIG. 8 is a cross-sectional view of the electrical connector taken alongline A-A in FIG. 1; and

FIG. 9 is a cross-sectional view of the electrical connector taken alongline B-B in FIG. 1.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

Referring to FIGS. 1-9, an electrical connector 100 in accordance withthe present invention is embodied as a USB Type C receptacle connectorfor charging purpose and comprises an insulative housing 1 and aplurality of contacts 2 secured to the insulative housing 1. Theelectrical connector 100 may further comprise a shielding shell 3enclosing the insulative housing 1 to form a mating space. The pluralityof contacts 2 are molded with the insulative housing 1 in one-shotmolding operation.

The insulative housing 1 has a base 11 and a frontal tongue 12. Theplurality of contacts 2 is arranged as an upper contact group 21including plural upper contacts 201 and a lower contact group 22including plural lower contacts 202. Each upper contact 201 has asecuring portion 2012, a front contacting portion 2011 exposing to anupper mating surface 121 of the tongue 12, and a rear soldering portion2013; each lower contact 202 has a securing portion 2022, a frontcontacting portion 2021 exposing to a lower mating surface 122 of thetongue 12, and a rear soldering portion 2023. The soldering portions2013 and 2023 of all the contacts 2 are arranged at a same plane in aline. Respective front ends of the upper contacts 201 are bent to formheads 2010 to be embedded in the tongue 12 while exposing to grooves1220 thereof; respective front ends of the lower contacts 202 are bentto form heads 2020 to be embedded in the tongue 12 while exposing togrooves 1210 thereof. Each groove 1220 or 1210 has a pair of side wallsand a rear wall. During manufacturing, molding tools may be employed topress on the heads 2010 and 2020. The rear wall may have a slopedsurface for guiding a corresponding contact of a complementary connectorto pass smoothly.

The contacts 2 are formed from same contact carrier to have one group ofcontacts thereof, namely the upper contact group 21, situated beside theother group of contacts, namely the lower contact group 22. The uppercontact group 21 includes one outermost ground contact 210, one powercontact 211 adjacent to the ground contact 210 while spacing two vacantcontact positions therefrom, and one detect contact 212 immediatelyadjacent the power contact 211; the lower contact group 22 includes oneoutermost ground contact 220, one power contact 221 adjacent to theground contact 220 while spacing two vacant contact positions therefrom,and one detect contact 222 immediately adjacent the power contact 221.The contacting portions 2011 of the ground contact 210, the powercontact 211, and the detect contact 212 are exposed to the upper surface121, forming an upper row. The contacting portion 2021 of the groundcontact 220, the power contact 221, and the detect contact 222 areexposed to the lower surface 122, forming a lower row. There is arespective bend at a junction between the contacting portion 2021 andthe securing portion 2022 of each lower contact 202, while thecontacting portion 2011 of each upper contacts 201 is coplanar with thesecuring portion 2012 thereof.

During manufacturing, rear ends of the upper contact group 21 areconnected to a first carrier strip 4, while the front ends thereof areconnected to a second carrier strip 5; rear ends of the lower contactgroup 22 are connected to same first carrier strip 4, while the frontends thereof are connected to a third carrier strip 6 that is situatedbeside the second carrier strip 5. A respective V-shaped cut 2014 isformed at a junction of the second carrier strip 5 and the head 2010 anda respective V-shaped cut 2024 is formed at a junction of the thirdcarrier strip 6 and the head 2020, for ease of severing the carrierstrips after the insulative housing 1 is molded.

Each of the surfaces 121 and 122 of the tongue 12 provides twelve (12)contact positions arranged centrally-symmetrically to supportdual-orientation mating as is well known in this art, though not allcontact positions are occupied. In the embodiment shown, on the firstsurface 121, the ground contact 210 occupies the first contact position,the power contact 211 occupies the fourth contact position, and thedetect contact 212 occupies the fifth contact position; on the secondsurface 122, the ground contact 220 occupies the first contact position,the power contact 221 occupies the fourth contact position, and thedetect contact 222 occupies the fifth contact position.

The ground contact 210 has an integral latching portion 2101 exposed toone side surface 123 of the tongue 12; the ground contact 220 has anintegral latching portion 2201 exposed to the other side surface 124 ofthe tongue 12. The latching portion 2210 has an upper part 2211 and alower part 2212 exposed to a corresponding side surface 123 of thetongue 12.

To make the electrical connector 100, the method may include primarily astep of forming the plurality of contacts 2 from a single contactcarrier to have the upper contact group 21 with respective contactingportions 2011 connected to the carrier strip 5 and the lower contactgroup 22 with respective contacting portions 2021 connected to thecarrier strip 6 situated beside the carrier strip 5; a step ofinsert-molding the plurality of contacts 2 with an insulator to form theinsulative housing 1 while exposing the heads 2010 and 2020; and a stepof severing the carrier strip 5 and the carrier strip 6 from the headsof the plurality of contacts 2. As is well known in this art, theshielding shell 3 may subsequently be assembled and the carrier strip 4severed.

In this embodiment, the first carrier strip 5 and the second carrierstrip 6 are essentially located at the same horizontal plane which isessentially at the mid-level of the front tongue 12 for facilitatingmolding. Understandably, the reason why it is required to have the firstcarrier strip 5 discrete from the second carrier strip 6 is that thecontacts of the lower contact group 22 experience more offsets thanthose of the upper contact group 21, thus resulting in more materialconsumption. Notably, as shown in FIG. 5, the contact of the uppercontact group 21 only has two offset structures S while the contact ofthe lower contact group 22 has at least three offset structures Sdisregarding the distance/dimension of such a offset structure S. Inother words, if the first carrier strip 5 and the second carrier strip 6are still unified together to be one piece as the rear contact strip 4,the contacts of the lower contact group 22 may have more tensioned forceinternally than the those of the upper contact group 21, thusjeopardizing the balanced or symmetrical structures from the mechanicalviewpoint. In addition, in each group the front offset structure S ofthe outermost grounding contact 210, 220 is located in front of thefront offset structure S of the power contact 211, 221 which is locatedin front of the front offset structure S of the detect contact 212, 222.The offset arrangement for the front offset structures S of thegrounding contact 210, 220, the power contact 211, 221 and the detectcontact 212, 222 at different positions in the front-to-back directionmay avoid force concentration applied to the specific position of thewhole contact group.

What is claimed is:
 1. A method of making an electrical connector whichincludes an insulative housing having a tongue with two oppositesurfaces and a plurality of contacts with contacting portions exposed tothe two opposite surfaces of the tongue, characterized by the steps of:forming the plurality of contacts from a single contact carrier to haveone group of contacts thereof each with a respective contacting portionconnected to a first carrier strip and the other group of contactsthereof each with a respective contacting portion connected to a secondcarrier strip situated beside the first carrier strip; insert-moldingthe plurality of contacts with an insulator to form the insulativehousing while exposing front ends of the plurality of contacts; andsevering the first carrier strip and the second carrier strip from thefront ends of the plurality of contacts.
 2. The method as claimed inclaim 1, wherein the severing step comprises keeping the front endsinwardly of a front end surface of the insulative housing.
 3. The methodas claimed in claim 1, further comprising a step of enclosing ashielding shell over the insulative housing.
 4. The method as claimed inclaim 1, wherein both two groups of contacts are originally linked to asame rear carrier strip while being severed therefrom afterinsert-molding so as to have all the first carrier strip, the secondcarrier strip, both two groups of contacts and the rear carrier stripderived from same sheet metal.
 5. The method as claimed in claim 1,wherein the contacting portion in said one group includes more offsetstructures than that in the other group.
 6. The method as claimed inclaim 1, wherein the contacting portion in said one group experiencesmore offset dimension than that in the other group.
 7. The method asclaimed in claim 1, wherein in each group of contacts, the contacts havefront offset structures at different positions in a front-to-backdirection.
 8. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein front ends ofall contacts in both two groups are located at a same mid-level of thefront tongue.
 9. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein in eachgroup, the contacting portion of an outermost contact includes a lateralprotrusion exposed laterally on a mid-level of the front tongue andfunctioning as a latching portion.
 10. An electrical connectorcomprising: an insulative housing having a front tongue with twoopposite surfaces; and a plurality of contacts being molded with theinsulative housing and having respective contacting portions exposed tothe two opposite surfaces of the front tongue; wherein the plurality ofcontacts are originally formed from a single contact carrier to have onegroup of contacts thereof each with a respective contacting portionexposed to one surface of the front tongue and the other group ofcontacts thereof each with a respective contacting portion exposed tothe other surface of the front tongue; and the one group of contacts issituated beside the other group of contacts.
 11. The electricalconnector as claimed in claim 10, wherein the contacting portions of theone group of contacts are oriented reversely-symmetrically with respectto the contacting portions of the other group of contacts.
 12. Theelectrical connector as claimed in claim 10, wherein the contactingportion in said one group includes more offset structures or experiencesmore offset distances than that in the other group.
 13. The electricalconnector as claimed in claim 10, wherein in each group of contacts, thecontacts have front offset structures at different positions in afront-to-back direction.
 14. The electrical connector as claimed inclaim 10, wherein front ends of all contacts in both two groups arelocated at a same mid-level of the front tongue.
 15. An electricalconnector assembly for completion of a final electrical connectorcomprising: an insulative housing having a front tongue with oppositefirst and second surfaces thereon in a vertical direction; and a firstgroups of contacts and a second group of contacts being commonlyinsert-molded with the insulative housing and having respectivecontacting portions respectively exposed upon the first surface andsecond surface of the front tongue in the vertical direction; whereineach of said contacts extends along a front-to-back directionperpendicular to the vertical direction; the one group of contacts isspaced from the other group of contacts in a transverse directionperpendicular to both the vertical direction and the front-to-backdirection; and both said first group of contacts and said second groupof contacts being originally stamped from a same sheet metal andrespectively linked to a first front carrier strip and a second frontcarrier strip which belong to the same sheet metal but are discrete fromeach other; wherein both the first front carrier strip and the secondfront carrier strip are required to be removed away from the both twogroups of contacts before completion of the final electrical connector.16. The electrical connector assembly as claimed in claim 15, whereinboth said first group of contacts and said second group of contacts areoriginally commonly linked with a same rear carrier strip belonging tothe same sheet metal, and the same rear carrier strip is required to beremoved away from the both two groups of contacts before completion ofthe final electrical connector.
 17. The electrical connector assembly asclaimed in claim 15, wherein the contacting portion in said one groupincludes more offset structures or experiences more offset distancesthan that in the other group.
 18. The electrical connector assembly asclaimed in claim 15, wherein in each group of contacts, the contactshave front offset structures at different positions in the front-to-backdirection.
 19. The electrical connector assembly as claimed in claim 15,wherein front ends of all contacts in both two groups are located at asame mid-level of the front tongue.
 20. The electrical connectorassembly as claimed in claim 15, wherein in each group, the contactingportion of an outermost contact includes a lateral protrusion exposedlaterally in the transverse direction on a mid-level of the front tonguein the vertical direction, and functioning as a latching portion.